Challenger
Challenger
DISASTER
News:
Colombia Disaster – Kalpana Chawla, an American
Indian, a victim
Our reactions:
Shock, Pity, Outrage
Responsibility?
Rewind…17 years
back…
Date : January 28, 1986
Place : Kennedy Place Centre,
Florida, U.S.
Preparations on for NASA’s launch
of 25th space shuttle into space
SRM contractor- Morton Thiokol
Crew members:
Francis R. Scobee, Michael J.
Smith, Ronald E. McNair, Ellison
S. Onizuka, Judith A. Resnik,
Gregory B. Jarvis
• Warned of dangers of
• Ignored warnings,failed to report
launching a cold day
technical concerns to their
superiors
• Robert Ebeling and Roger
Boisjoly, engineers
• Thiokol knew about the problem
working on SRM project at since 1977; Almost half of the
Thiokol, complained to shuttle flights had experienced O-
Alan McDonald and ring erosion in the booster field
Thiokol management joints. But management did not
about cold weather support the redesign task force
problems with solid rocket
motors
What REALLY went wrong?
A teleconference - to discuss the low temperature performance of the
boosters - held between engineers and management from Kennedy Space
Center, Marshall Space Flight Center and Morton-Thiokol
• Engineers : If O-rings were colder • Marshall's SRB Project Manager, Larry
than 53°F, there was no guarantee Mulloy: Data was inconclusive and
the O-rings would seal properly challenged the engineers
and temperature forecasts for the
• Managers believed O-rings could be eroded
launch day was 31°F.
up to one third of their diameter and still
seat properly, regardless of the
• Alan McDonald appealed to NASA temperature
management not to launch
• Engineers refused to sign the
recommendation • Recommendation stated that the cold was
still a safety concern, but data inconclusive
What REALLY went wrong?
Jerald Mason, senior executive at Thiokol said,
“Take off your engineering hat and put on your management hat."
Management was
• Anxious to launch for economic considerations, political
pressures, and scheduling backlogs.
Economic Reasons
• Had to fly the shuttle soon to prove the Space Transportation
System's cost effectiveness and potential for commercialization.
Scheduling Backlogs
• Launch pad had to be refurbished in time for next mission, for a
probe that would examine Halley's Comet, before Russia did so.
Political Consideration
• President Reagan, in his State of the Union address, was going to
talk on education and was expected to mention the shuttle and the
first teacher in space, Christa McAuliffe
What REALLY went wrong?
Unconcern for safety procedures
• Due to the low temperature, a significant amount
of ice built up on the fixed service structure that
stood beside the shuttle.
• Ice might be shaken loose and strike the shuttle.
• Launch postponed by an hour to give the ice
team the time to remove ice.
• Launch escape system -undesirable due to
"limited utility, technical complexity and
excessive cost in dollars, weight or schedule
delays.” – Crew lives could have been saved had
ejector seat and full pressure suits been used.
What was done? – Rogers
Commission
Included Neil Armstrong and • Found : NASA's organizational culture
Chairman of State, William Rogers and flawed decision-making processes,
a key contributing factor to the accident.
• NASA managers did not know of
Thiokol's initial concerns about the
effects of the cold on the O-rings, and
did not understand that Rockwell viewed
the large amount of ice present on the
pad as a constraint to launch.
• It concluded that: “...failures in
communication... based on incomplete
It said, Challenger disaster and sometimes misleading information,
was "an accident rooted in a conflict between engineering data and
history.” management judgments.”
Impacts…
• Thiokol agreed to "voluntarily accept" the monetary penalty in exchange
for not being forced to accept liability
• NASA
– Created a new Office of Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance.
– Initiated a total redesign of the space shuttle's solid rocket boosters.
– Streamlined and cleansed communication line
– Designed anonymous reporting system
– Made astronauts more active in decision making process
– Appointed a shuttle astronaut as NASA administrator